Marion Bosworth

Marion Bosworth (born 2 December 1966) is the President of the United States, elected in 2020, and is the first female president. A member of the Democratic Party, she supported the "Bridge the Gap" movement to restore friendly relations with the People's Republic of China, and she prevented the Second Cold War from escalating into warfare.

Biography
Born in Chicago, Illinois, to an English-American family, Marion Bosworth became a lawyer at the age of 21 after graduating from the University of Northern Illinois. She was admitted to the bar the next year, and after becoming involved in politics as a Democratic Party member, she became the Governor of Illinois in the 2016 elections for President of the United States. Bosworth believed in cleaning up the city of Chicago, and her strong views and successful executions of her plans led to her successful campaign for president in 2020, winning her the honor of being the first female president.

She gained popularity through her "Bridge the Gap" campaign, where she strengthened U.S. relations with the People's Republic of China through open communication and intelligence sharing, as well as having a costly cyber-defense stance. But her country was caught up in the Second Cold War with China and terrorist Raul Menendez planned to ignite a large war between the major capitalist nations, so she had to rely on Admiral Thomas Briggs and JSOC to solve the problems. In 2025 the United States succeeded in eliminating Chairman Tian Zhao of the Strategic Defense Coalition, stopping the enmity between the USA and PRC, and she brought down Menendez in Haiti on 18 June, ending the risk of another world war within nine years of World War III's end.